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March 15, 2023 96 mins

Today we have Roland Martin on the show to talk Black Media, criticizing Democrats, galvanizing non-voters and more.  We are also once again joined by our celebrity cohost Ms. Pat. Finally we open up the phone lines to discuss workers walking out of a restaurant serving drinks named 'Negro' & 'Caucasian'.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning us yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo yo
yo yo yo yo yo Sholemaine, the peace to the planet.
Guess what day it is? Yes, what day it is?
That's right this Wednesday, hunk pay middle of the week
and we got out guest co host back, Miss Pat,

(00:21):
Miss Pat, welcome, Thank you damn Miss Pat. You changed quick.
You're like a whole different person when you got off
the elevator. What I just shot on a little limp bloss. Yeah,
you like a superhero. Now, superheroes had the glasses on,
and you know, then they take the glasses off and
then they become the superheroes like you, Miss Pat. Now, oh,
do I say, think about when you take your glasses out.

(00:41):
Don't play like yo wet glasses or whatever. They're changing
that peel bottle like you. Poor No I do. Yeah,
this's I bought this from the house, putting my crime
royal back. Okay, all right, well you know I went.
I would love to say when I was at school,
I would love to say the first day Miss Pat
worked here, she got here like a five o'clock. Then
the second day's five thirty to day was five dragging,

(01:02):
dragging the day. My time is wind and damn first day,
she's like, I get it all the time of my professional.
Second day, I'm on time. Third days like y'all see
me when I get here. No, your people saying you're
getting here too early. We need to bag you up.
About forty five min I said, enough, said system. I'm
gonna lay down and put on my bro in five

(01:24):
forty five, Pat like the studio too hot, dough lord
happened said today he walked ahead to day. He said
it was eighty degrees because Pat wanted it warm, and
she walked in. That's too it. She warm is not hot, y'all.
Between warm and hot, you're dealing with a fifty year
old woman. I only got two more day and one
more day or whatever. You ain't gotta orrid about you.
You can free into the skin, fall off like a snake.

(01:44):
But I can't stand to be cold. And remember it
remind me when I was poor without heat. I need heat,
not hot. Though it's like egrees in the rumors, I
didn't turn the heat. I didn't do that. I had
high flash. I'm a little hot now you can turn down,
turn take that sweat out like you going to the
second grade. Greed definitely, stuff like you about to stay
at the bus stop this morning? Who got you dress?

(02:07):
Your mama? Yes, cold with your litane. Gotta be that greed.
Bottom over did it this morning? I see you look
like your mama got your drinking on the black mom
spitting your face, didn't wipe it off around He let
you figure out. The rest you know didn't happen to you, Yes,

(02:28):
they didn't. You didn't get my MoMA had spit. My
mom licked her fingers and wipe my eyes. Yeah, but
you didn't get ashy. I don't get ask you. I
know you don't get out. I don't know as he
don't get it. One show up, Well, let's get the
show cracking. Roland Martin to be joining us. He'll be
our guest for today, that's right. And of course up

(02:49):
next we got front page news. It's a lot going on.
Joe Biden. He addressed the country about guns. We'll talk
about it when we come back. Test will be joining
us as the breakfast club. Good morning, good morning, everybody
is teed. J n V. Charlomagne the guy we are
to breakfast club. We have miss pat Ow co host.
Let's get in some front page news the morning testing.

(03:11):
Everybody is back this morning and let's get this started.
Your President addressed the nation he was talking gun control yesterday. First,
as executive order helps keep firearms out of dangerous hands,
as I continue to call on Congress to require background
checks for all firearms sales. To meantime, my executive Order
directs my Attorney General will take every lawful action possible

(03:33):
to move us as close as we can to universal
background checks without new legislation. I just it's just common sense.
The Executive Order also expands public awareness campaigns about the
red flag orders laws. Second thing it does, the Executive
Order ramps up our efforts to hold the gun industry accountable.
It's the only outfit you can't soothe these day. And

(03:54):
does that by calling out for an independent government study
that analyzes and exposes gun manufactors aggressively market fire amateur civilians,
especially minors, including by using military imagery days. Let me
ask you a question, would that ever be proper gun legislation?
When these politicians are in the park in the pockets
of these organizations like the NR well, I would hope so,

(04:18):
but as you know, I love to keep it real
right now as it stands, and how it's been for
a very long time. This is just where the Senate
and the Congress has always been just deeply divided. And
even when Democrats control both the House and the Senate,
we know that Joe Manchin got a strong pimpan and
so he also was not interested in banning assaul rifles.

(04:43):
He was looking at one point of raising the age
from eighteen to twenty one. But they just cannot come
together when it calls when it comes to banning assault rifles,
and that is the main assaul weapons. That is the
main issue where there's a divide that this particular executive order,
like you heard the President say, it is going to
help crack down on background checks, try to strengthen that.

(05:06):
It will also improve tracking guns and ammunition for UH,
for things that are lost and stolen. It also gets
better transparency for gun dealers and so forth. But bottom line, Charlemagne,
the main issue is banning the assault weapons, and that
is just something that right now has not happened, and
it doesn't look like it's going to happen in in

(05:27):
their future. But President Biden said he vows to seek past,
he vows to continue to fight this, but a vow
means nothing when you talk about actually getting it done.
Until your point, all you gotta do is just look
up which sentences have benefited the most money, uh from
from the NRA. You know, they say majority of America's
want strong gun laws, but you know the NRAs has
spent over three million dollars to benefit political campaigns and

(05:50):
senators who oppose gun safety legs. Let me ask you
a question, test Um into the room. But I know
a lot of these shootings that thing happened with the
legal gun, So them checking people's backgrounds that matter. Like
you know, yesterday in Harlem there was a couple of
students shot and like a three school radius. So I'm
sure that those people didn't go get legal guns. I
know a lot of those guns are coming illegally from
the streets, you know, absolutely, But those are societal issues

(06:12):
that don't start to stop at guns. That's what happens
when you don't invest in you know, the community, when
you don't invest in youth services and social services and
education and mental health inituees and other community resources. Absolutely,
it's too folded. And one of the things I always
talk about when we talk about this crime and tough
on crime. I can put a stop sign, you know,
on a street corner. It doesn't mean that nobody's ever
going to run the stop sign. You know, it is

(06:32):
going to happen. The question is did you put the
stop sign at least on the street corner. So laws
can only do so much to prevent crime or prevent
those types of things. Like you said, criminals are going
to get guns, they're not going through the background check process.
But we still have to do all we can to
make sure that on the legal side, we're doing everything
in like the Charlotte Magine's point, what are we doing
to prevent violence in the community, and that is investing heavily.

(06:56):
And that's one of the things I'm concerned about as
we move forward into the twenty four with this tough
on crime, that Democrats and Republicans are both in agreement,
which they do agree on tough on crime, and so
we're gonna see how they're gonna spend that money in
the community to stop that violence. Now. Also, Bishop Lamont
is back in the news. You know, that's the Brooklyn
bishop that's been seeing a lot of different controversy going

(07:17):
on in the last couple of months. Yes, Bishop, they
call him well because the story is hilarious. It's kind
of hilarious because they call him. You guys may remember
Bishop Whitehead, known as the bling Brooklyn Bishop who was
robbed last year, which that's not funny, but ye, yes,

(07:39):
this is the one that was robbed last year. But
now in the pursuit of more bling, he's been hit
with a new fraud charge. And what he did. The
reason why I was so tickle is because I couldn't
believe I read this. He said that his bank he
went to the bank to get aloan and said that
he had two million in the bank, when the reality
is he had ten dollars worth of time. Yes, ten dollars.

(08:01):
I thought I read it wrong. I said, do they
mean ten thousand? But this man really had ten dollars
in the bank and said that he had two million.
And he's done this before. In twenty and eighteen, he
tried to get a business loan for two hundred and
fifty thousand for his company called Anointing Management. So he
submitted fake brought bank documents on that as well. So

(08:22):
the bottom line is he submitted all of these different documents.
He tried to get a one point three million dollars
mortgage for six bedroom home. The charges go on and on.
It's as long as the Bible. But the bottom line
is he says that he hey, he believes that God
has his back, and he says that the Feds better
watch out. So we're gonna see what the Book of

(08:42):
Fads has to say about this. One is all said
and done, I can tell you one thing. His criminal
history was way more interesting than the Bible. Just it was.
I only wonder how people do that. I mean, we've
all appaired tried to get loans to purchase something, whether
it's a car or a house or whatever it may be.
They go through so much stuff with me, like there's

(09:02):
no akasa. I got two men and only got ten
dollars in the count. So how do some people just
get away like that? They got a friend, the friends
that I know who fixed the paperwork to make it.
You don't know the people I know. He says he
got a friend of Jesus, so he's been just depending
on Jesus all this time. We're gonna see how it works.
I blame that man. Church blame I blame that church.

(09:23):
How come to church well and tiving and offering the
way they was supposed to. On Sunday, I had way
more than ten dollars. I've read that too, and I
said it gotta be ten thousand. Nobody got ten dollars.
It was like ten people in the congregation. They all
gave it diving and offering. Man, it was like three
hundred people. And now when he got robbed that day,
wanted video. Ain't that the man who got robbed, It

(09:45):
was a lot of people. It was three hundred people. Lady,
jump in bribbles. Only God can judge that, right, all right,
all right, well, wish him the best special. I don't
know how many people go. Now, get it off your chest,
Thank you, miss chest, Thank you. Next hour, eight hundred
five eight five one on five one. If you need
to vent, hit us up right now, eight hundred five
eight five one on five one, Get it off your chest,

(10:06):
call us up. It's the breakfast club, the morning, the
breakfast club. The judge judgment when you get his time,
only God can judge him. After that, No, you could
judge just to it, bro, you know, wrong from right, Bro,
even in the test Stone situation with your ass right,
your average for twenty years and they gave him a
deal of testifiable and you got more years. People mad

(10:28):
at try if I want to put that deal too?
What are you talking about? Now? Who's mad? I'm talking
about the Troy ask you what are you talking about?
Name year? And you're supposed to be a Christian and
you a judge. The Bible say, don't judge people. The
Bible says, nor for ray bro, I don't know what
you're talking about, Sean, Sean, what are you talking about? Miss?

(10:51):
I don't know what are you talking about? He don't
want you talking about He's past? Hello? What's this? Hey?
What's up? What's up? Rod Rigus? What's going on? Hey?
I wanted to ask me pad how should get her
wrong with young Dolphins dog? And then I think I
can flot video passed away? Did you do a video

(11:15):
with the young dolphers new? Yeah, that's me? He said,
how'd you get that role? The guy who've shot the
video video? Guard? We will go away back? He called
me up and put me in it. At that time,
I had never heard of young Dolf really never. I
told myself some rapper video name you Dolph myself? You
don't dog? Oh my god, he just got shot. He

(11:36):
just got shot. But I wasn't one. We got shot
in North Carolina. Yeah, I think someone shot. He always
messed up. It was really nice, a really nice guy.
He was a good guy. Yeah, definitely, rod Reriguez and
keep a lot. We're gonna do something big for Memphis
in the next couple of weeks. We're gonna announce it
the next couple of weeks. I think it's something that
you're gonna want to be involved with you all right,

(11:58):
all brother, get it off your chair. That's eight hundred
and five eight five one oh five one. If you
need to vent, hit us up now. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club. This is your time to
get it off your chest. Eight hundred and five eighty
five one oh five one. You want to hear from
you on the Breakfast Club? Hello? Who's this? What's going

(12:21):
up this club? Tyler? Heygo? What's up? Y'all? Hey? Tyler?
You got you got us some bluetooth for speaker? Take
us off if you do. No, No, I don't I know. Yeah,
we get you. Now give him a few chests. Brother,
appreciate it, Miss Pat. How you doing? Love? You are amazing.
I love you. You are a true comedian. I here
Lea Street. I really appreciate you, Miss Pat. Thank you

(12:41):
for being you. Thank you. Can I just say I
didn't tell the people calling him from me because it
sounds like a damn sent up breakfast club listeners gotta
love for you. They ain't gonna show it to you. Good,
Thank you good, thank you good. What are you calling from.
I'm calling from Chicago, miss Pat. My name is Tyler.
I'm an actor as well, so if you need somebody

(13:02):
to your show, you holler at Lee. My handle was
mister Dingo on Instagram. I'll last real like oh Man,
Lee Daniels name all I wanted to I wanted to
call up here though, man. I wanted to give some
advice to the ladies out here because Tammark Brastor did
be real dirty last week. So I wanted to give

(13:24):
some advice to the ladies out here. So y'all just
they you know, get y'all and secure y'all. Man, So
y'all want to be single at a loan at forty
six years old like her? One thing that lady, what
did Tamar do? Do you? First of all, brother, what
do you talk about? I called last week and she
said that because here like my name, she just hung
up on me in Pluce. I told her how her
expectations of six months to a year for a man,

(13:46):
it's just ridiculous. That's just too much to marry a
dude within that, you know, to get married. Okay, I
got you Thish, get back right now. Yeah, this is
might get that bow. So this is minus mice for
the lady. You know, she come on Friday if you
want to say it to her. She coming from. Oh good,
I will. It's her birthday too. It's a birthday. I
don't give a damn. I'm gonna call back. Get it.
So all I'm saying this, lady, listen to the man.

(14:09):
Cada to that man, be open minded, leave your baggage
behind you, and just be open and expressive. That's how
you're gonna secure and get you a man if you
won't be a loan of single at forty six years old. Ladies,
that's all I got to say on that, speaking of
getting getting the man, won't you at original Big Daddy
on Instagram, won't you Shaddy, don't do that. I'm goodbye,

(14:34):
Missy Crazy. I'm a college you are well you he
ain't never guy. I'm Lead oh Man. Lead un changed
his name. I thought his name was original Big Daddy
on Instagram just Lead Daniels. Now, Hello, who's this? He's
going Sunday? Good morning? Now says here. You had a

(14:55):
date yesterday and it went really bad? Yeah it did. Um,
but I'm not gonna lie on speaking. I was hearing
you guys kicking them out on gun laws, and I
just felt like, you want to know what I deal
with kids every day, and we shouldn't be speaking about
a more impression issue. UM. I just wanted to know
what you like to think about you know what I mean,
underage kids. I'm talking about young kids now, the days
and where between the ages of like eleven and fifteen

(15:17):
that are sitting down here in ending under you think
that their parents should be held in powable or you
know what I mean? Whatever you know what I mean
happens on the road, or you know what I mean?
What do you think about that? Not if they don't
get that, if they don't get the gun from their house,
like if they take their parents gun because their parents
left the gun unattended. Maybe, but if they just get
a gun out in the street, the parents shouldn't be
held responsible for that. Yeah, I feel the same way

(15:39):
as a gun owner. You got to make sure that
your guns are locked up there in saves that in
places where your kids can't get them and reach them
or get to them if need be. So I mean, yeah,
but things do happen. I mean I know a lot
of parents that lock up their guns and forget to
clothes to safe or there's something small and things do
happen that that doesn't excuse it. But you know, yeah,
the parents should be held liable if they allowed the
kids to get their guns. Kids are sneaking, even though

(16:01):
if you have your guns locked up. They watch you
long enough, they know your routine, they know how to
get into your stuff. They're still your cold the same
way they steal your cold to your phone. And I
agree to if they didn't get that gun from your house,
because you don't know what your kids do when they
walk outside of dough. So if my kids got a
gun out of a bush it and kill somebody, you
can't fault me for it. Well, we need to be
talking about when it comes to these eleven and fifteen

(16:22):
year old especially these kids from these points disenfranchise areas,
is how do we invest in them? You know what
I mean, Like I said earlier, how do you invest
in youth services and community programs and mental health initiatives
and social services like these kids need other they need
community resources to help them just develop. Man. Yeah, they
got They got a number of time on their hands
right now, now, you're right, And I mean it takes
a lot of people that's been locked up, that's been

(16:43):
in gangs to come back to the community and really
break down what they're doing because it seems cool, you know,
I mean, you're growing up and you seem as a
form of protection to make sure I'm good as a brotherhood.
But you know, you got to speak to some of
them ojis that got locked up, that did twenty years,
that that that followed the same path because they got
to glow in that prison and oil of the ankles
and lets they tend. But what I know one thing,
kids like to talk to kids who can speak their language.

(17:06):
You know, nobody wants to talk to people who they
feel like gonna look down them. Because I was once
one of those kids, and I didn't want to hear
what nobody say who couldn't understand from understand where I
was coming from facts. So I started. I've started, like
a little bit, going into school speaking because I speak
their language. I've broken English from the street. I've been
that person before him, and they open up and there

(17:28):
listen when you're just coming in there like and they
feel like you don't know what they're going through. They
closed down. They don't want to hear that, and I
just don't. I think we don't have a lot of
people that go back to the communities to nurture these kids.
These kids aren't inherently evil, they aren't natural born criminals.
Then these kids born into a certain circumstance and they're

(17:48):
playing with the cards that they debt. To deal them
some new cards. Right when I got cuts there, my
niece kids, her son was five years old, and I
heard him say one they said, get out of my
ear with all that damn noise. He was five, and
I was like, because you know my nieces on crap,
I slapped that boy so hard and then I said,
why you let him talk to you like that? He said,
my dad has said I don't have to respect her.
Then she also told me that that some man just

(18:11):
walk around the community, I don't know, say he had
an angry issue. I said, he don't had an angry issue.
He's mad because of the situation. You got to me
if you saw Raymone now, oh my god, when I
tell you, they'd be like, they can't even understand what
I'm saying. They're so proper. But this is the same
kid that they told me how an anger issue? The
most manable. I mean, he do he do little boys

(18:33):
stuff at school, d try to be something he ain't sometime.
But other than that, a good kid. I got into him,
and I've had him for ten years. You can't even
tell that these are the same hood rad kids I
picked up. Like when I met the little girl, his
little sister, she was like, my name yo yo? I said,
what do you know your real name? Yo yo? I said,

(18:55):
your name may know yo yo? Your name Merlanda. And
it took so much for me to change these kids around.
But you see him to day, you'd be like d kids.
Mama was on Craig and left me. You can't tell wow,
get some new cards, get it off your chest. Eight
undred five eight five one oh five one. When we
come back. We got rooms on the way. We got
to talk about little nas X, he apologized to his

(19:17):
own community. We'll tell you why when we come stay out.
I stay out of elemental Peat business. Bro, I'm just
gonna report it. Well. My daughter gay, she says she
ain't mad. We'll talk about it when we come back.
It's the Breakfast Club The Morning d Jake Envy and
Charlomaget the Guy. We're brothers. We're happy ever seeing at
least I am. The verdict still out on Envy, I'm black.

(19:39):
It's a breakfast club. Well Morning, everybody's DJ Envy, Charlomagne
the Guy. We are to Breakfast Club. We got our
co host, Miss Pat with us this week. Yeah, asking
for Drake tickets. Come. I ain't know what you were
talking about. You got blurred tickets or like, what is
blur the hell you are? Yeah, because yesterday one of

(19:59):
our use was asking about dream Velle concert and the
dream Velle toward the Dreamville show, and she was asking
for tickets and I was like, I just ran into
Jay Cole. I can probably get you some tickets, and
she was, but I don't have I don't have to
drake connections while y'all just be lying to people for
no reason. You mean, I just saw Jay Cole. I
didn't get new tickets. I didn't I speak to him,
so I don't pass him in the hotel. No, we spoke.
I speak to him. You got his number, Yes, he

(20:21):
got his number. He can get the ticket with you
behind your business. He can't get tickets. No, um who
I just saw Mama dat somebody say that yesterday. Mama
do scrappy Mama. That's why I saw somebody pulls that yesterday.
You give me tickets if you want them, she sing,
I swear somebody said that yesterday. Let's that's a joke.

(20:43):
That's probably a joke. What's wrong? Somebody had said. But
I said, since I can't afford Beyonce tickets, I'm gonna
go to Mama d show. And I said, you know what,
I gotta stop reading these means. I thought that was
real goodness. What do mama do you do? She sing?
She got a song? You're gonna go see somebody with
one song happens all the time you drank your drink,
it will be off time. All right, Well, let's get

(21:06):
to the let's get to the rumors or you've gossip
and when you chatting the rumor report, I mean, I
guess we're on the breakfast club. This is where the
tea spells, right on the breakfast club. Shout out to
white Cleff. White Cliffe hit me yesterday after he heard
us reporting him that he's in the hospital. He said,
he's doing well, so keep healing. Brother. Shout to why Cleff,

(21:28):
we get tickets to this show for sure? He always
on the internet saying, oh no, there's Anthony Hamilton. I'm
getting lords all right. Well, Little nas Ax he apologizes
to the trans community for a transition tweet. He said
it was not cool. He posted a picture of himself

(21:49):
looking like Little nas X and then himself with long
black locks, and he said the surgery was a success.
It seems like people didn't find it funny, so he apologized.
He said, I alogize to the trans community. I definitely
handle that situation with anger instead of considering why it
was not cool. Much love to you guys. Sorry. Then
somebody said, baby, this apology ate it. You need to

(22:10):
apologize to the trans community and material ways that include money,
sharing your platform, stop or raise awareness and just or
just keep it. This is a fake ass hell, knock
it off. And that sounds like fake outrage when you're
asking for money and all kind of other stuff. Well,
I guess that you want to check. Yeah, that's come on.
First of all, the other picture with little nas eggs, Yes,

(22:31):
damn me look good. I did not know that was
Lord nas that you want to say it? Sure that
that and then you can you can look good? And
then and then I want you to uh here you
go free to reply to what he said back to you.

(22:57):
Ain't got no finger for though. It's not a little.
That's the whole other person. That's gotta be a little.
That can't be little. I want to club lord knowledge.
You can't say that. I love little little Knowledge. Jesus,

(23:17):
I don't. I stay out of LGBTQ business because I
don't even understand why that's offensive. So, but he looked good.
If that was him in the dress, he was beautiful.
I don't know. That's a little she do look good? Okay,
what I mean, I don't know what is this. It's
a picture that's dressed up as a woman. I don't know.

(23:39):
It's not that's what he just said. No, it's not.
It's a whole different person. That's what I said too.
I said, that's a little no egg because he said
it said it's said he's got the surgery was a success.
That's a whole other woman exactly, idiot. I'm looking, my god,

(24:01):
I thought that was you don't lie, I did the
trans community coming in for you? I thought that was sex. No.
I was about to say how he transformed like that?
Wouldn't it's a pictures the internet or the internet ruining
us all. I thought, Mama D really had a concert.
Y'all thought that was really a woman. Y'all, well, woman's

(24:23):
I'm confused now, that's not at that's not a little
that's a woman. Yet he thought that was a little
nose I did. Yes, Well, let's move on diplo. Yesterday
he was talking about receiving oral and he said he
received oral from a man before. My god, what the
hell was going on this morning? Mamma D concert? But
he said he received oral from a man and he's

(24:43):
that doesn't make him gay. Sure I got from a
guy before? You're sure that's happened? Yeah? And you just
don't remember, I mean, you're nothing. You're saying you're not
committing to it. But you're saying you're sure it happened
for sure, but you don't have a specific memory of it.
I'm a it's gay unless she's like make eye contact. Way,
there's such a straight guy I think to say is

(25:06):
not like gay? I think I don't know it's you
tell me. But what we're about to we're talking about
that Clinton, Um, because this is a serious podcast. Okay,
what happened to Uh? He said he received or from
a man before, and he said, because he didn't look
the guy in the eyes, it's not gay. So he

(25:27):
was making a joke. It sounds like you're serious to me. Well,
I can't agree. If you don't know who giving you are,
you ain't game. You didn't look down and see nobody.
It could have been a ghost. I agree, But if
he didn't look down, it ain't gay. Point I don't.
I don't understand if he's been serious in that though.
It don't matter he said it. Well, I was born

(25:48):
in the nineteen hundred and seventy eighth I'm old school.
I was always taught that same sex relations are who
was giving you the ore? So anybody aunt could have
been given the ore? So he didn't look that. So
you don't have a witness. He don't know who gave
him the R, but he clearly knows because he knew
enough to say it was a man. Well, he was
probably thought because she had some chin hair rubbed him

(26:09):
against his stops. But I get chin hair and I
am a girl. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, you're a woman. Yeah,
I'm a woman. Yeah. I don't have folk kids. Yep.
So I can't wait. If you didn't hate, I hate,
I well, I being rast with you comment fat my

(26:34):
last Why y'all up like that? Somebody hit you? Man?
Oh my goodness. You wait till y'all guys see the
video after this show. I'm getting mad into the She
was talking about man whoever gave him a R? Pull

(26:54):
my Jesus Christ. All right, well that is your rumor
for it if y'all want to consider that rumors. Now,
when we come back, we got front page news. Tesla
figure Row will be joining us. We'll be talking about
a lot of things. Uh, and also this new drink
that they're making this called the Negro. Would you buy
what about the Gaucasian? Would you buy that one? I
buy them crap? I mean I buy that cucad Jesus,

(27:17):
you had a better look in it. All right, we'll
talk about it when we come back. It's the Breakfast Club.
Good morning, the Breakfast Club. Your morning's will never be
the same. Did you know one word can change everything?
Zach Levi returns as Shazam and the new movie Shazam
Fury of the Gods. This film is a musty event
with epic action and a whole lot of funny. March seventeen,

(27:37):
See Shazam Fury of the Gods only in theaters, rated,
PG thirteen. Everybody is dj Envy Charlemagne the guy. We
are the Breakfast Club. We got our guest hosts, Miss
pat with us, and let's get in some front page
news as we bring Tesla Figare rote back. That's right,
the hood whisper, good morning family, Glad to be here.

(27:58):
Now let's start off with this Mississippi man. They say,
this Mississippi man went missing and then when he was found,
his head was cut off. Absolutely, this is so, I mean,
this is a heartbreaking story of rest. In piece to
Rashim Carter, twenty five year old Rashie Carter has been
trending all over social media. Such a beautiful, handsome black
man who his body was found dismembered. Now, what happened

(28:21):
with the story is he went missing October of last
year at the Super eight hotel in Laurel. According to
his family, when he vanished, he sought help from the police.
He told his mother that three truckloads of white guys
were trying to kill him. Literally said that he tried
to get help, He did not get any help, and
then November second, they found his remains. He was found

(28:42):
in a wooded area about twenty one miles from where
he was last reportedly seen. And the problem now is,
after the family is trying to get justice, authorities have
released a statement saying there's no reason to believe foul
play was involved. Has to make right, somebody has to
make this makes sense. This brother's head was severed from
his body. I don't know who in the hell can

(29:03):
cut off their own head, his vertebrate, his spinal cord.
I mean, he was literally just dismembered into pieces. So
what the family is doing now is asking for a
federal investigation because obviously local is not getting it right.
And I just talked to Attorney Crumb just about ten
minutes ago, and he said to stay posted on this
story as more develops, because more will be coming out.

(29:26):
His short lived sounds like Mississippi is still burning. To me,
Racism is built into the very fabric of Mississippi. I
don't see how decapetation don't problem more of an investigation.
That's insane. Well maybe they don't know what the word
the caprontation mean down now? Maybe right? And remember we
just talked about earlier this week. For everybody who's listening
where we're talking about that guy burning the cross? You
know that too was in Mississippi. So what the hell

(29:48):
is going on in Mississippi? Or Mississippi been like that?
Y'ain't never seen the movie Missisippi Burnon? Oh for sure?
For sure. As a country, we've grown a little bit.
You did we leave Mississippi out of this? Yeah? I
think they're behind Pat, miss Pat? So what are they
still in nineteen forty? So she's not thee I wouldn't

(30:09):
go to Mississippi for nothing. Now, we also got to
switch sides and talk Michael Irvin. I see him all
over the news yesterday. What's going on with Michael Irvin? Man?
This makes my blood ball? I mean it really really does.
For those of you that have not watched the video,
I encourage you to watch it. Uh. You guys may
remember that Michael Irvin was accused of sexual assault in

(30:30):
a Marriott hotel, and so yesterday Michael irvin attorney has
released the video. You can see for yourself that literally
he was just talking to this woman. I believe he
just touched her elbow and you know, she put her
arm back. But they were literally just having a conversation
about football. And so he has always maintained as in
and since he has always said that the evidence will

(30:52):
come out. But the problem with this is this really,
you know, hurt his reputation. At that time, they had
pretty much pulled him. I want to say, Bob recall
you guys remember he was getting ready to do some
commentary before the Super Bowl. Yeah, and they pulled him
from that. So now we see that the employee was
simply just walking walking around having a simple conversation. I
thought it was interesting that the attorney pointed out that

(31:14):
there was a man, I guess her manager, kind of
standing on the side and appears to just be watching
something strange going on with that, just watching um. But
eventually they shook hands, they parted ways. It was a
simple conversation. And so now Michael Irvin is suing Marriott
and the Jane Doo rightfully as he should because this

(31:35):
has absolutely done damage to his reputation. And I don't
know where we are with this, guys. I don't know
if black man just need to walk around, would body
coms twenty four hours a day or what, because this
is obviously an attempt for a shakedown in my opinion,
you know, not putting it on the record, but this
this is just I mean, it's disgusting to see, you know,
something like this happened in this case. What does she

(31:57):
say he did, because I've seen the video. They just
looked like with chatting and he said, that's exactly what
they were doing. But at the hotel. They can see
these hotels anytime they have um anytime, I guess when
the NFL team is there, they say, hey, have you
see anything strange? Let us know. So, uh, they called
the NFL and said hey, on something. You know, Uh,

(32:18):
Michael Irvin's been inappropriate, and so NFL security walked him
out and he asked, Hey, what's going on? What the
hell's going on? They said, well, you've been accused of
sexual assault, so we need you to leave the hotel.
So he was totally taken off guard because he had
no idea what they were talking about, because it was
literally just a conversation. So again, thank god for the
tape to be able to show his innocence. This is

(32:40):
why you can't jump to conclusions. And this is why
I he when people dish your consequences before all the
facts are I did. I didn't believe it. I did
not believe it. I hope he suited a tanning lotion off. Absolutely,
I do. And I hope this correction is just as
loud as the accusation was. Correct, you know what I mean. Correct.
That's exact mentally wrong with her to thank you with

(33:00):
sexual assaulted by touching you. Check, at least take your
shirt off. You can't get one by rubbing your airbow, ma'am.
But she thought that it's like anything else, like that
white woman will be allowed enough to go against that
black guy, and they would white, white urban and a
cutter red check. That's what she thought. I'll be trying
to tell y'all, but no, I don't. Well, there's a

(33:23):
new drink out there called the Negro and the Caucasian.
But that's a boy racial baby. Ain't tell us about
this this drink the Negro and Caucasian. Who is on
a lighter note, I know we just got through with
you know, both of those stories. But on a lighter note,
Uh yeah. Dozens of employees have walked out of their

(33:43):
job in Pennsylvania. Management allegedly wanted to add a drink
called the Negro and the Caucasian. Now the Caucasian drink
was I guess they were doing a play on the
white Russian and there I was also talk about the
redneck Russian as well. So what's so funny about this
is the employees said, you know, we are offended. And

(34:04):
I'm suddenly not making light of their offense, but they said,
we're offended by this, and the owner pretty much he
doubled down. He said, hey, guess what, buckle up because
the Negro drink is coming next. So the owner told
the staff, hey, feel free to walk out. The staff said,
no problem, bet that we're gonna do that. In addition
to that, we're going to start a boycott. And so

(34:24):
they went on social media, which is a great tool
when you're trying to bring awareness, and so eventually he
learned that fat does indeed me greasy, and he issued
an apology. Is it a bar? I mean, is this
a Coca colaf? I mean not colifed? I mean is
it made a lot of them because it sounds like
something that they make out a bar. Now it is,
it's a restaurant. And so they were trying to be creative.

(34:47):
They're known for having all of these creative dreams, and
so they said, hey, let's do the Caucasian and the Negro.
And then he got upset. He said, you know, how
dare you questioned me? I've never been racist, There's nothing
wrong with me. How dare you negroes? Questioned me about
a negro dre thinking? He really doubled down. It was
really until the employees actually backed up what they said
they were gonna do and walked out and caused the

(35:07):
big fuss on social media that made him to apop
made him eventually apologize. I don't think he means it
because he doubled down. But you know, don't Caucasian, what
is the drink? Howd on? What was what's gonna be
in the drink? I took your drink before it is
an Asian drink. I mean, because this sound like it
had been going on you was just a play on

(35:28):
the white Russian. So what's the Nego drink? But why
how can white Russian ain't never offend nobody all these years?
Like I don't have a problem with Nego drinking Caucasian drink.
So you want a Negro drink? What would be insane?
Watermelon in Hennessy? Then I can understand. You got a
man with that that's a little different. Can play the
Henessey I can't. I can't go with that. And y'all
like it's called coon punching cracking. But if they had

(35:49):
a Negro drink and it and it had Hennessy or
with watermelon on the side, you wouldn't be offended. Well,
I understand that watermelon this symbol of freedom, but I
I wouldn't be an offend me, you know what I mean.
I gotta see what's in the drink. I don't think
that just the words Negro and Caucasian offend me. So
you want to see what it is. So you're looking
at Negro, is just the color of the drink, or

(36:10):
because white Russian is literally white? If you want to
be technical. I went to a Mexican restaurant. My husband
ordered Madelo. They said, you want negro drink? Okay, okay,
I think I haven't probably at the ball in the
white gro like you whatever, that's better than I want.

(36:33):
I want three D. It sound like, let's be fair,
it sounds like they made these offensive drinks before. This
ain't the first time, and if equal opportunity Negro drink
Caucasian drinking. Ain't like they just singled out the black people.
I mean, well, they make they've made creative drinks. But
he thought, since it was already called, you know, the

(36:53):
white Russian, why not go ahead and say Caucasian so
that they're known, allegedly from what I read, they're known,
you know, to come up with these creative type drinks.
And so I guess he figured, hey, if it's good
enough for the white folks, is good enough, you know,
supposed to call negro the Negro drinking? Obviously, maybe it
was a good idea. Charlotte May said, he's not offended.
So but these employees were. They walked out and they

(37:16):
said they were just uncomfortable asking, you know, I guess
going to ask customers how many negroes. Do you want
on the rocks? Fat is asking a good question to
the white people get offended that caucasion. It didn't say
it just said that dozens of employees have walked and
walked out. It didn't say if they were white or black.
It was mainly the employees that had a problem with it.
It never made it to the menu. It was just
the fact that he brought it up. Yeah. Um, and

(37:38):
and so that's that's what happened with that. Okay, Well,
thank you test for joining you to appreciate you. Absolutely right,
we're coming back Roland Martin, we'll get joining us. We'll
go kicking the rollers it don't move, and Tesla will
see the master breakfast look the morning Breakfast Club. Everybody

(38:03):
at cj MG Charlomagne, the guy we are to breakfast club.
We got a special guest in the building. Yes, indeed, Martin,
what's happening fending New dig I'm all good man, it's
been crazy busy. Things are going well. We've had a
great twenty twenty two with black stun networking. So we
are moving with twenty twenty three, launched our twenty four

(38:23):
hours streaming channel, and you know my goal for us
by the end of the year was to be on
five platforms. We probably will hit that by the end
of April. When people see that hashtag hashtag Rolling Martin
unfielded a black Star network, What did that mean? Well,
Rolling My Unfiltured as the show. So when I launched
September twenty eighteen, that was the first show that I launched,
and so everybody told me, look, this is not gonna work,

(38:45):
trying to go get the job back and seeing him
a good job at MSNBC, and I was like, yeah,
I'm interested in having a thirty two year old white
producer tell me what I can and cannot cover. And
I also saw in terms of exactly where we were going,
so we had to do proof of concept. So Rolling
Unfiltered we're now four years in fielding that up. And
then last year I launched the network, I knew I

(39:06):
wanted other shows as well, because I wanted to be
more than just one show. So the show basically is
the axis. It's the same thing or ten poles, same
thing happens, and you look at cable television. So we've
now got four other shows, Wealthy You from Devor Owens,
Balanced Living with Jackie Hood Martin, the Pivot with Stephanie Humphrey.
We got a greg A car show, The Black Table,
and then another daily show of Frogi Muhammad. We've got

(39:27):
three shows we're developing as well. So things are going well.
The biggest thing is still dealing with the ad agencies
when it comes to supporting black owned media, because you
got the some folks who say, oh, you know, we
don't want to buy news is like all brand safety,
and I'm like, yeah, but I see your ads on
the Fox News and see them on MSNBC, I see
them on CNN with his opinion, so please tell me

(39:48):
again with his brand safety stuff comes in. And so
that's why our audience, who supports us, it's been crazy.
I mean our audience, the fans have literally given about
two million bucks in last four years. And so that's
how we've been able to really sustain and build, uh,
to sort of do the things necessary because you know,

(40:08):
black owned media is so important. But but but specifically news.
There's a ton of gossip, there's a ton of entertainment,
it's a ton of oh for the culture. But the
question is what are you being informed about? And what
I hate is when people say, oh, man, I wish
we knew well that those of us out here trying
to tell you. But the question is what are you watching?
What are you listening? Um? And you know, look, you know,

(40:30):
March sixteenth is the U is the anniversary the hundred
and nineties sixth anniversary of the launch of the first
black newspaper, Freedom's Journal. Uh. And it was March sixteen,
eighteen twenty seven. Uh. And there's a quote in the
third paragraph. We have a mural in my office. This
has it on there. It says, we wish to plead
our own calls to long have others spoken for us?

(40:53):
And that's really has been the monster of the Black press.
And and that's why that matters, because I fear us
and I've said this only show numerous stands before. I
fear the future where we're asking somebody else to tell
our story. That is the scariest thing in the world
to me. I feel like that's all people doing, even now,
Like when you see people pitching shows to like, you know,

(41:14):
different producers and production company in the Hollywood, I feel
like that's all we ever do, right, And that's because
we have been conditioned to seek permission as opposed to
grant permission ourselves. When we look at BAT. You know,
Bob Johnson owning BT. When the millimat March happened, his
pace simply became him as like, Bob, you know, what
what are we doing? If you if you cover with

(41:35):
the minimam March and we go no ads, you know
we're gonna lose money. He said, Then today we're gonna
lose money. So Bob Johnson only can make that decision
because Bob Johnson owned BT. And the reason we've been
having this fight even with the black owned media, it's
because if you read Britt Pulley's book, which is an
amazing book called The Billionaillo Bad, the unauthorized biography of
Bob Johnson and BAT. When Viacom purchased BT, some of

(41:59):
the rest stone and Mail Commerson saw that BT was
getting fifteen hundred dollars with thirty second AD, that MTV
was getting eight thousand dollars for and mail goals. BT
was discounting itself. No, they weren't discounting themselves. The agencies
were not. They were not valuing black people. Now, if

(42:20):
you just do the math, BT gets sold for two
point three billion dollars post the assumption of debt, it's
really about three billion dollars. If BT had been getting
its fair value from the beginning, that means that when
BT was sold, it should have been sold for ten
to twelve billion. Remember Bob and Sheila Johnson reaped, you know,
the billions from it, which meant that if they got

(42:40):
their foul value, they could have actually sold thirty percent
of BT for the same three billion and still owned it.
So now you see what happens when we get short
changed in the dollars and how it impacts black ownership.
How do we change that though, because like when you
turned it down, I'm sure there's somebody else out there
that be like, you know what, I'm gonna take that
money right and that well, and that's also part of

(43:02):
the deal. So we have to understand when you're operating,
it's a collective, is that if you take that crumb,
you're gonna keep getting that crumb. So we have to
train folks to understand that, No, you have to stand
for it. No, let's get let's get one hundred or
the five hundred thousand, or let's take down the million
or to several million dollars So that's that one that
has to happen and not get played by by isolating us.

(43:23):
That's one. Two. Information also comes in because too many
people are literally walking into meetings and they don't have
the information on how to do battle. Three, we've got
to have our institutions also begin to property properly leverage them.
See what I mean by that. If you have corporations

(43:43):
that are doing business with the National Urban League, the NAACP,
National Action Net, Rainbow Push Coalition, and others, those institutions
have to say, all right, a donation to us is great,
but it's marginal. Okay. So Wells Fargo was the presenting

(44:04):
sponsor of the NAACP Image Awards. Okay, that's fine, that's great,
But the question is how much money did black people
lose during the home foreclosure crisis as a result of
the business practices of Wells Fargo. I guarantee you as
far more what the donation was. And so I believe
the our institution need to have we need to have

(44:24):
race indexes, meaning not just who are your black folks
on the board directors? What are the contracts that you're provided?
I was going to ask, so you know what we're
talking to all the economics right, and then talking inflation fell,
and now they're talking about the banking crisis. What are
your thoughts on that. Well, first of all, you remember
when you talk about that particular bank there, what happened there.
That was an abject failure on their leadership because they

(44:46):
were they were not properly prepared for the Fed's interest
rate racist. That was one. Two, I'm laughing the death
of all these white conservants who are yelling, oh they
were so concerned about being woe as if a group
of white men ain't that of broke banks before. Let's
just be real, okay, But what you have is the
financial industry is so crazy because if there's just a

(45:09):
sliver of a fear, everybody pull that money. That's whether
it's private equity that I mean, so it's like, oh
let me hold onto cash. That's the whole deal. So
that sectors really depend upon confidence if thing's gonna be fine.
That's what happened there. They just got all spooked. Well,
that was a crisis of leadership, okay, it's Secondly, it

(45:29):
was also a weakening of the regulations. Barney Frank needs
to be answering to this because you have to die.
Frank Bill. He actually libied once he left Congress and
joined a bank. The bank that he actually joined, they
were the ones that went under a signature bank in
New York. They weakened the laws. Conservatives and Republicans love
yelling deregulation. No, there's a reason regulation is important to

(45:54):
prevent that from happening. I spend multiple shows walking people
through the data, say no, this is a lie, this
is what he said, this was proposed, this is what
got funded. Here's the whole truth. The people were kind
of like, oh, we didn't know all that. Yeah, because
the places that you're watching, they're not gonna break it
down to you for you, right, because let's just be clear,

(46:15):
MSNBC and CNN are not gonna give you that level
of details, specifically to at HBCUs it ain't gonna happen.
Just why you gotta have black owned meeting, all right?
We got more with Roland Martin and when we come back,
don't move. It's the Breakfast Club the morning. Everybody's d
V Charlemagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. Miss
pattis Head, our guest host, was still kicking it with
Roland Martin. Charlemagne, What would you say to people who said,

(46:36):
you know, of course the Silicon Valley bank is getting
the bailout. But you know, if you ask the stuff
for like through the loan forgiveness or you know, universal
healthcare or social services, housing, education, they don't never have
money for that, but they always have money for the
bailout banks. In the fund wars, what would you say
to those people? One, they're actually um mostly incorrect if
you break those things apart. First of all, you look

(46:57):
at the student loan death forgiveness that right now is
awaiting the Supreme Court decision, so you're ahead those or arguments.
So the body administration actually said let's forgive student loan debt.
Now they got sue now goes to the Supreme Court.
That Supreme Court, three branches of government, legislative, executive, judicial,
bottom line istastblots in the Supreme Court. So that happens there.
When we talk about HBCUs, the level of funding of

(47:18):
the last four years has been the most they've gotten
ever when we broke down, you're talking about almost eight
billion dollars. And then if you if you go inside
of those numbers and the coins and Bobby Scott on
the education community, Collins and Jim Clyde Burn Collins went
all my Adams. Look the thing, the thing was so
significant with those numbers that most of those HBCU, especially

(47:39):
public HBCUs, got four times as much money from the
federal government then they got from the states. And they're
supposed to be state funded. Yes, the states. So these
HBCUs a lot of money. No, no, no, I'm just
talking about just the annual the annual amount of money
they were given. You take all of those federal programs,
cares at America rist complaining all of those. I mean,

(47:59):
the numbers don't lie in terms of I'm talking about
you're going from Alabama, A and M, the Florida and M.
The look callin ant topped the bottom in many cases
four times as much money. I walked through the whole
spreadsheet on my show, and folk were like, hold up,
the state gave Florida, A and M that much and
they got that much from the Ferra government. Absolutely, and

(48:21):
so so your money there now, you're absolutely right part
of the They are right in terms of how Congress
is excellent at finding money for largely white farmers twenty
five billion with Trump's president. But then oh no, no, no,
we can't afford that particular program. That's why I keep
walking people through why voting matters. See, folk, go, if

(48:44):
I don't get this, ain't voting. Well, if you don't vote,
you ain't don't get this, and so you have you
cannot change policy, but not change the policy makers. The
problem for us is we're not voting on number. Numbers
don't lie. If black voters in most places vote sixty

(49:05):
five seventy seventy five percent of our numbers, we can
sweep election because if you're in an area in the
state half a million registered ineligible Black voters, thirty percent vote, Okay,
that's one hundred and fifty. If third percent of them
vote as one hundred and fifty. If fifty percent of
them vote, that's an additional one hundred thousand votes. Fifty

(49:29):
I got the seventy fifty or be heard, should walk
about ninety five thousand votes. If third percent of black
people vote's five hundre thousand Black people third percent vote.
That number is what it is. So what do you think?
So none of us, But so now how are you?
What are you now? Deal with? You now have to
first of all, start very early to educate. You can't
see this. This is what we do. We go, we

(49:50):
got to register. First of all. I can't get you
to vote unless you're registered. I can't get you to
register unless you're enlightened. I can't enlighten you unless you're educated.
The problem is we stop educating and enlightening and we
spend all of our attention just trying to get somebody
registered registered. Because no, if I don't see the value,

(50:11):
I have to now explain to you why people come
here all the time, man are talking about voting. Why
should I vote? I go, what's the one thing you
care about? Then? What you mean? Well, you obviously care
about something. What do you care about? It's rooted in politics, whatever,
whatever the issue is. And but but see if by
force him no, no, no, no, what do you care about?
Then they go money? So then they throw it out okay,

(50:34):
And so then when they unpack it, then I'm like, okay,
let me explain to you how this federal race impacts
the one thing you care about. Then they'll go, damn, ain't,
I ain't ain't never thought about it like that, because
no one has walked them through. We don't have Citi's
classes like we used to. We're not walking people through
who They don't understand what city council does, county government does,
what the DA does. Look, it was only the last

(50:57):
five to eight years of people now understand the power
of a district attorney. Why do you think all of
a story electing progressive district attorneys? Because people were being
educated and talk. That is what is desperately needed. And
so that's one of the reasons why for my show
we literally use a show to walk folks through teaching, educating.
I've had more people come up to me who say, bro, man,

(51:18):
I ain't know nothing about this stuff, but watching now,
I understand it because we're taking the time to do it.
You can't just say go register. If Democrats were smart,
and I'll say this to civil rights schools, goes here
to all divine nine. We should be starting right now
on a massive national education plan for twenty twenty four.
You cannot wait to June of twenty twenty four or

(51:40):
septemy reordering of the presidential primary. Yeah, you have to,
because again you need people to understand the long term
implications what's about to happen. Do you realize right now
in Florida, right now, they are considering a bill that
could potentially eliminate eliminate all black fraternits of diroritis from
public vers right now. It passed out of the committee

(52:02):
in the House last Now, now the Senate bill is
totally different. That thing has been considered right now. When
you look at what the attacks on d EI, now
Florida did it, Now Texas isn't doing. North Kallina doing it,
removing DEI from all of the job listings as well.
Understand what their strategy is. Their strategy which I lay
out in White my book White Fear. Their strategy is

(52:23):
a fifty two hundred years strategy. We're talking next year. No,
they're talking the next fifty years. So that means that
if you have hollow is your daughter which one I
got four, but the oldest one is twenty one, the
youngest one is one, Okay, that means they want to
impact your youngest daughter when she having her fiftieth Yeah,

(52:43):
my youngest is one. Yeah. I want I want you
to think about that. They want they want to impact
your daughter when she's having her fiftieth birthday. That's how
they're operating. That's the agenda that they are executed. So
I am I'm yelling on the route. Hois Black America?
Wake up to understand what they are trying to do.

(53:06):
It is not the next two years of four years.
They want to cement power and control for next fifty years.
So if we shift, yes, those numbers and go from
thirty to forty to fifty to sixty to seventy, now
all of a sudden, game totally changes, and they're gonna
look up and went, what the hell they turn out

(53:28):
at seventy percent? Yeah, because numbers don't lie. The Santis
would not be governor if black people had voted as
sixty five percent of our numbers, the Santis never becomes governor.
All right, we got more with Roland mart And when
we come back, it's the breakfast Club of morning. Everybody's
DJ Envy Charlemagne, the guy we are the breakfast Club.
Miss pattis Head, our guest host, was still kicking it

(53:49):
with Roland Martin Charlemagne. With the Democratic Party approving the
reordering of the twenty four presidents of primary, how do
you see that empowering more black voters? Well, first off,
whenever the president's election comes around, it was always Iowa,
New Hampshire. Ain't no black people there? That very few
I spoken. I want say no black people that there.
I was spoken to the end. In Iowa. There are
black people there, but the numbers are very small. So

(54:10):
the rally is white interest or placed ahead of everything else.
Now all of a sudden, because African Americans make up
dominate the democratic part in South Carolina, you're going to
have to be talking about the things that we actually
care about. So that is a change. But here is
the problem. In the last election, there was a significant
drop off of black turnout in South Carolina, massive dropout.

(54:35):
So what has to happen is Black people in South
Carolina are going to have to become far more engaged. Again,
it's turnout, turnout, turnout, turnout, turnout. When people gotta you
have a big audience with your network. They're engaged with
you because of the words that are coming out of
your mouth, shooting more emphasis beyond the actual Democrats to
get people engaged. Why do we always do that to

(54:57):
the voters, like go out there, go out there and vote,
goddamn vote, Because shouldn't Democrats be doing things the first
to energize people. They should but what I'm not gonna
do is wait on somebody else to save me. If
I can throw somebody a life, best let's see when
you feel like when they don't save you, now you
feel like you don't need them. You ever, here's the
deal vote, here's zalo because somebody going in. You can

(55:20):
hate both of them. One of them are gonna win. Period.
Now I have to decide, okay, of the two people
or the three people, the four to five, who who
do I want or who can I potentially talk to
try to get something from. That's what I have to decide.
I don't I don't care who it is. Which now
means I gotta make a decision, all right, and I

(55:42):
can say, man, I don't like my decision. Again, somebody
is going to win. I now have to say what
are my interest and then what are my interests? Now
means who can I get a meeting with? Who can
I put pressure on? What are the pressure points? If
a Republican wins, I literally have no pressure points because
they ain't talking to me anyway. But Democrat wins, I've

(56:05):
got pressure points if I use them. See the problem
is we go I voted cold. I'm out I'll see
you later. No, no, no, no, no, I gotta be
in that person's face. I gotta be right there. I
gotta be and let them know I'm coming for you.
The only way they're ever going to really move, and
I'm never going to discourage anybody from sitting out elections,

(56:25):
But the only way they're ever gonna really move is
if one year no black people show up and they
end up losing. But we can't afford to do that.
So how do you how so how do you push them? You?
You push them because first of all, remember they are
primarist could you say like you said, no need But
here's the first thing. They are primariss. So the question
is who are we supporting in the primary? Remember you
don't you're not just allway just accepting whoever runs. There

(56:47):
are options, Okay, all these people who were yelling, man,
why we got an old, old guy Biden. I'm sorry, y'all,
asses with real silent. When Corey was running, mccama was running,
there were choices a lot of black people like Bernie.
But then people told us, no, Bernie can't win. Well,
first of all, the first of all, the first of all,
it's not they told us Bernie can't win. Folk didn't

(57:07):
vote for Senator Sander. That's just what happened. Again, they
didn't vote for Senda Cory Booker, they din't vote for
Senda Kamala Harry. That's what happened there. It just it
simply comes down to engage. I'm simply saying for us,
the reality is, I don't care who you are. If
you check out of anything, no one will pay you
any attention. But what do you think about his age?

(57:29):
What do you think about body's age? And people saying
they knew that time early signs they knew, but you
didn't see the early signs of alleged dimension. Right there's
alleged demension. I ain't Look, I got no report, I
got none of that. Bottom line is, look, he's there,
and let me teate something. The reason I'm not sitting
there tripping. It's a bunch of old people right now.
Who are United States senators. It's a bunch of old

(57:51):
people in the House. It's a bunch of old people
right now. What somebody listen to me right now, it's
an old as person. Who's your county commissioner, who's your
city councilman? And this is why I tell all of
my millennial and gen Z followers, if you vote your numbers,
you can change the game. But if you sit in
your ass at home and people say, oh, yeah, they
increase in numbers, and yes, they did increase the numbers

(58:12):
in tween twenty two. But I'm saying, vote your numbers.
Millennials and gen Z's can change every political office in
America if they actually vote their numbers. The same thing
I'm saying to black people, you vote sixty eight seventy
seventy five percent, you can sweep elections because we know

(58:32):
how other folks are going to vote. That's what it
boils down to. You have to vote your numbers, use
your power. If you are sitting hormone election day, you're
not using your power, and it's going to waste before
we get out of here. Man, you had a great idea.
This is I don't remember how long ago this was,
but I heard you say this out loud. I don't
know if you said it publicly yet about what you

(58:53):
would like to see happen with the President and the
Vice president in terms of black meeting. I think you
said you wanted to put together Yeah, I love what
what what needs to happen is that they should do.
Just like Biden met with the main TV anchors and
they mostly all white other than Lester Hope. Uh, then
they need to do one with black owned media, black

(59:13):
journalists who work in mainstream media. They might bring up
the debt ceiling. Black people bring up the debt ceiling.
That's not it should be gonna be bringing up. Okay,
so it needs to be black on media that that
needs to happen. I've made that perfectly clear. And again
they're folks in the White House when happen because I did,
and I really don't care. That's what I'm supposed to do.
I am going to advocate for black owned media. That
ain't never changing in my entire life. I pushed city council. Look,

(59:35):
I've cussed out many a black politician who ignored black
owned media. You advertising everywhere else, but then you don't
spend with black on media. I'm like, no, that ain't happened.
And so yeah, I've had some choice words for and
congrats on the NACP award. Now we didn't win. We
likemination and the one thing people wanted to just rolling
ever sit down at events. Okay, you just wanted to rule.

(59:58):
No no, no no no no no no no no
no no see no, I worked the room. See that's
people understand. Okay, when you hit the Image Awards, most
people are literally in one location. So I'm a journalist.
So when I get up, like look two years ago,
he's hey, he'sa Ray And I was like, yo, East,
I say, hit your text. She said, oh no, that's

(01:00:18):
an old number. Boom new number, dude, I'm working. Soon
they go to commercial break. I'm up. Boom boom boom
number email. I go take a seat. That's what Kalin does.
Heard up. That's how I'm gonna work it. I will
work every single room. And if I go to an
event and I am, I have not walked away with

(01:00:40):
somebody's phone number. I wasted my time going that eything.
There you go. Hey, that's work baby, that's Roland Martin.
Ladies and gentlemen, make sure you check out Roland Martin Unfiltered,
the Black Star networks right and give donate. It's easy
checks some money. Order the po box five seven one
nine six Washington d C. Two zero zero three seven
days ere one nine. I got a lot of black

(01:01:00):
people who are still seeing check him on order. They
don't trust nothing else but cash apps, dollasigne are m
unfiltered PayPal or Martin unfiltered Vemo or m unfiltered Zeo,
rolling at, rolling s Martin dot com, rolling at, rolling
Martin unfiltered dot com. You could tell to do that
every single day. See I can tell about every day. Well,
let's roll and gentlemen, breakfast the Knowledge, Rolling Morning. Everybody

(01:01:21):
is dj n V scholamine that guy. We are the
Breakfast Club. He got miss pat Heale co host. And
let's get to the rumors. Let's talk Jesse small at
from my hat who a lot of names or you've
gossip and chatting. This is the Ruler report. I mean,
I guess were on the Breakfast club. This is were
the tea spells right on the breakfast club. All right,
you guys remember Jesse small letting the incident that happened

(01:01:43):
out alleged incident that happened out in Chicago, right with
the two African brothers. I don't know if you even
got to say alleged no more. I think it was
proven that it didn't happen. That man after he was
twenty years or is allegedly the twenty years. I don't
know what jail and he out, so evidently he won
guilt to a legend. And like you said, wait a minute, now,

(01:02:05):
I thought that he was found guilt guilty. I think
that they didn't do no Timmy. Yeah, well, the two
brothers Bola and Ola and speaking out about the event
and what actually happened. I thought he was a good actor.
But I also was thinking that this guy's a fraud.
This guy's really sitting here just lying to these people,

(01:02:28):
lying through his teeth and not caring. I think he
shut a tear and I won a little game. Boy,
who might watch this to see that I fucked back
this crazy man, y'all crazy terror man, this dude wild
bowler and Ola. We don't care, all right, y'all can't

(01:02:49):
crucify that man after y'all helped him perpetuate the lie.
But didn't They also was like lovers or something. They
got my signs what you're talking about? Yeah, they said that,
they said one of the brother of the brothers and
justice allegedly. I thought all of them put this playing together.
They did, but I think they were in time some
type of relationship. I keep saying. Allegedly I thought that

(01:03:11):
was in a relationship or now I don't want to relationship.
I'm talking about all of them did this together. You
called me a liar and say I'm crazy, but you
helped me with the lie and help me with my crazy.
But she was asking if they wanted a relationship. Was
Ola old off with a part of wasn't it in
the relationship? I don't know, Bola, and I don't know
how far with. I don't know nothing about somebody played

(01:03:33):
on froze it. This is them describing the incident how
they were supposed to do it. Then we started tousling, moving,
moving around, and then I threw him to the ground.
He wanted it to look like he fought back. That
was very important for him because he said, hey, don't
you beat my ass? Make it look like I'm fighting

(01:03:53):
back and whatnot. So we did that. After I threw
him to the ground, I used my knuckle and gave
him a nook. Why did I do that? To give
him a scar, to give him a mark, to make
it look real like he really did get his ass sped?
Afterought I did that all fake kicked him. I don't
know what he was doing. I wasn't paying a task
where I came around with the bleach, the infamous bleach

(01:04:16):
in the hot sauce bottle, poured it on his shirt.
Then I finally put the rope around his face. I
did not put it around his neck. I just placed
it on his face. And that's when we took all.
Bowler and Ola have zero room to criticize Jesse small.
Let you helped him do all of this. Whatever you
say about Jesse, you have to say about yourself. If
if Jesse crazy, then y'all crazy. If Jesse was lying

(01:04:37):
and y'all was lying, knock it off, let it go exactly.
Why even bring his back up like they so innocent?
Nuki as he get like your little mile finger, it's
usually to that like that, like that. They did it
to his eye, so it left leave a mark. Oh
so he just took his out remember when your eye
last fell off earlier? And a right look. That's why

(01:04:59):
okay now. Also, Sierra seems like she's getting a little
backlash because of the dress she wore at the Auscars.
It was totally see through. Did you see it? Of
course I've seen it. You've seen it too, and you
stare staring at the picture I'm explaining it. So they
said she posed for pictures and she was absolutely completely naked.

(01:05:20):
They said she had nothing but gloves, a thong and
nipple covers on. People were like, you have three kids
and a husband, how could you wear that? Uh, you're
disrespecting Russell. This is embarrassing the Russell. Y'all just were
in prison praying for people. That's what happened to you.
When you leave prison, make it get naked. Lord. But
you know, it's always people, I say, do what you

(01:05:43):
wanna do. It's always people who ain't shaped like Sierra
that's complaining. I saw Sierra picton. I said, if her
husband allowed keep strolling, I mind my business. It's always
somebody who eat cheek fil a like me round the
clock and ain't got no husband. Hey, they even't got
no husband. They want to tell us what to do

(01:06:03):
my your business? You lonely crabs, Jesus. I mean they
always just come and lead even so left. First of all,
you can't even you can't even walk down Sierra Street
without getting rested. So why are you even coming on
what she wears. If Russell was right, that widout so
if he allowed her to wear is all right by me.

(01:06:24):
I wish I could look like that. I look like
that in the sixth grade. Been a long time, Yeah,
I think sometimes needless criticism comes from a place of jealousy.
And then of course, yeah, it's how it broke. People
make talking about rich people. Yeah, if Russell's fine with it,
that's their relationship. Who are we to the poke at
the shape people? People? That's bad built, you know what

(01:06:44):
I mean? Yeah, I mean, and it would look cold
in that building to me. I sneezing because you know
COVID out here. But if she held back her sneeze
and didn't get nobody sick ass here? Girl, you look good.
I mean, I don't know what side your underwear here
because I'm thinking we like how mos to me? All right?
Well that is your room of reporter? Are you giving
a donkey to man? Who? After that, I get a

(01:07:07):
lady named Madison Crowley. They come to the front of
the congregation. Though we like to have a word with her.
She don't how to keep a secret. Okay, we'll get
to that. NeXT's to breakfast club. Come morning, the breakfast club.
Your morning's will never be the same. Your company as
gold this year, find the right people to help you
achieved them. With jip recruiter, we're four out of five
employers get a quality candidate within the first day. Try

(01:07:29):
free at jip recruiter dot com slash breakfast at zip
recruited dot com slash breakfast. Don't get a dust because
right now you want some real It's time to don't
give the day. So if we ever feel I need
to be a dog man, come in with the heat.
Did she getting Please tell me I had become donkey
of the day the breakfast club bitches, Yeah, don't get

(01:07:52):
to day. For Wednesday, March, fifth team go to a
young lady named Madison Crowley. She is from the birthplace
and miss pat Atlanta, Georgia, atl And. According to the
NY Post, she got a tattooed for her soon to
be husband. That's right, Madison is getting married soon and
to celebrate her groom, she got a new tattoo. Would
you like to hear more about it? While she disgusted
on TikTok, let's listen, I'm getting a secret tattoo for

(01:08:14):
my fiance and he doesn't know about it. Obviously. It's
the secret. We're getting married in eleven days and he's
gonna find out on the wedding day about the secret tattoo,
So let's go get it. Okay, guys, it's done. It happened,
as you can see in those past clips. I am
obsessed with it. I love it so much. It's gonna

(01:08:35):
be a little bit harder to take care of them,
like I realized, because it's like a literally in the
butt and I'm hiding it from him for the next
eleven days. So that's gonna be fun and interesting and
like wearing leggings and stuff with like this. Miss pat
y'all are smart people. Tell me why she's getting donkey
here to day to day? I don't know. She got
a tattoo fiance on her butt, but she can't give

(01:08:59):
him none because sore back down and it's gonna eat vaseline.
So why are you giving a dunkey other day? Ay?
I think either it's the wrong name or they didn't
go through with the marriage. He cross side it. Played
it one more time, Play it one more time? Please?
Getting a secret tattoo for my fiance and secret tattoo

(01:09:22):
she got a tattoo for her room supposed to be
a secret his initials. Put it on the internet. Lord
Oh my, you slow. Y'all on the same But alright,
all right, Jesus Christ, she's already shown it to TikTok.
All right, I'm completely flabbergasted. Y'all might not he might

(01:09:45):
not be on social media. Made it. He might not
be on social media. Husband her husband ain't on social media. Yeah,
so you get the donet you donkey you know. That
was one of her replies to one of the comments.
She said, my fiance doesn't have TikTok. Well guess what, Madison,
I don't got TikTok either. Okay, you know, but I
saw this on the New York Post dot com. Does

(01:10:06):
the man not have the internet? Period? Huh? This tory
is on the Breakfast Club. Now you know what, I'm
gonna say this and feel thug. And what if he
can't read? He might be blind? Man? Shut oh man man. No, Okay,
I don't know what world we're living anymore. Okay, when
I when I go when I when I think, I
wake up and I live in a certain dimension. But

(01:10:27):
when I go online, I'm actually getting feeds from another dimension.
Because it's not the earth that I grew up on.
It can't be. Okay, I grew up in the nineteen hundreds. Okay,
when you was trying to surprise somebody, you didn't tell
nobody unless it was for a surprise party. Other than that,
you kept it to yourself and didn't boom. You surprised
your significan enough. She didn't say when he had to
be surprised. He was surprised when he found it on
the New York New So she actually did say tough

(01:10:48):
player that played played the other part right. I definitely
did have talking in line when I got this tattoo.
It's gonna be amazing. But my father and I haven't
had sex yet. We are awaiting at the marriage, so
it's gonna be a nice little secret surprise. She's been
hiding it. She wanted to wait until the night after
the wedding. The night of the wedding after they were married,
and he was hitting it doggy style, and then he
was gonna see it. Miss patt Oh, that's who dog

(01:11:09):
he is. And a long time for dogs mate. The
bottom of the dog too said she got him a
tattoo and a dog. That was great. That was a
sex remember that position back in the day. I can't
do it that Jesus oh man, hey man, some donkey.

(01:11:31):
The days just sell himselves. Please get Madison Crowley, the
sweet shouts of the Hambletones. Oh no, dog gee, oh
the damn well the dog gee. Oh the day ye wow,

(01:11:53):
donkey ahead to be so long? What you mean, the
Hamletones singing, I'm just saying. And the wedding gonna be
in four days. Y'all got four more days, four more days.
He still don't know the I guarantee he know. He
all in the New York Post, right, No, they got
his picture in the New York Post. And then they
got his pictures. Yeah, they got his picture. Let me
show you a picture. Stupid. That's the whole point of
Dunk to day. Many people can't keep no, see, they

(01:12:17):
cannot keep no. Hang out with them people who just
as smart. Let no racist. Caucasian? She was Caucasian, Yes
she was. Oh she probably mad. A black man don't
know abody to look at they walk they social media. No,
he white. I can't even find you. I was looking
for the story. I can show you all the picture.
Was she pretty huht sapped? I mean she white? What

(01:12:47):
I mean? I don't know. She looked like here she
go there she go okay, congratulations to them. Congratulations girl.
He should surprised her with a tattoo of his ass
and matching tattoos. Get part of it. She ain't gotta
add no ink to his face because a bed. No,
because he white and booty white man. All right, where
we come back, Let's open up the phone lines eight

(01:13:10):
five eight five, one oh five one. Now we talked
earlier about this restaurant in Pennsylvania. They had some drinks
that they named Negro and caucasion, and the employees were
pissed off about it that they decided to have a walkout.
Got the news report, no news report? All right, So
what would you do in that situation? Eight hundred five
eighty five, one oh five one. You work at a

(01:13:31):
restaurant the owner starts to these new drinks, one called
Caucasian and one called Negro. If I work there, what
would I do? Yes, because all some of the employees
walked out. Yes, we talked about it. We're gonna talk
about it when we come back. Eight hundred five eighty
five one oh five one. Now we don't know what
the negro drink is, nor do we know what the caucases.
I think the Caucasian is a whit Russian is supposed
to be a playoff of white Russian, and the negro

(01:13:51):
was what. I don't think they even had the negro
drink and cool light. Man shut. We'll talk about it
when we come back. It's the aactfast Lugan boarded the
Breakfast Club. It's topic time call eight hundred five eight

(01:14:12):
five one oh five. Want to join it to the
discussion with the Breakfast Club. Morning. Everybody is DJ Envy
Charlemagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We got
our guest co host, Miss Pat. She's joining us this morning.
Now if you're just joining us, we're talking about this
restaurant in Pennsylvania. Some of the employees walked out because
they thought the names of the drinks were disrespectful. All right,

(01:14:34):
So one of the names were a Caucasian, which is
a white Russian, and they were gonna call a drink
a negro. Now we don't know what the negro drink is.
We don't know what's in it. I have no clue,
but the employees walked out, So we're asking what would
you have done in that situation, Miss Pat? That's what
was in the negro all right, So let's say it
was I don't know, dark liquor and with a little
watermelon on. I don't know why black peoples get a

(01:14:59):
water man white people. Even the watermelon is a symbol
of freedom. I mean, but it's good. So I took
a drinking with a wallermeler. If it's pretty good and
it's got it's got top chef because I don't drink
a lot. So so you wouldn't be mad at the negro.
I mean, it's a restaurant with drinks names. Come on,
this world is two damn sensitive? No, I'm not mad.
You ain't calling me no niggro. Okay, Charlemagne, I'm would

(01:15:21):
patting my sensitivity me to not chet the tension. I'm
not the person to ask about this, but the answer
to me is I probably wouldn't quit. Like negro is
the word you used to describe. It's on your birth certificate.
I don't know if it's only yes, it's on my
birth certificate. I was born in seventy two. Look at
your race, say black boy mail, No, don't say nigro. No,
what year was you born? Charlemagne seventy eight? Or you're

(01:15:42):
a little bit after me? They had changed. I'm seventy
two niggro. It might be just black African American. I thought,
no negro, I around Charlemagne. Yeah, we'll say I'm fifthy.
I'm a little older than you. Guys mine say nigro.
And my granddad had said the e R and those
aren't slurs though, like road is, the word usually describe
black people. A black African heritage called Cajun is white

(01:16:04):
skinned of European origin, fresh out the caucas mountains. So
I don't R drink. I will back up. If they
said nigga juicing, cracker punch, nigga punch cracker punch, that's different,
you know what I mean. Not if you mix it together.
Because it came become a viration thing and to be
better calling the Obama. Then, by the way, they have duals.
You can go to restaurants in order the Obama. I'm not.

(01:16:26):
I don't think. I don't. I don't think I like
the negro drink. Why not? Because I just feel funny,
Like you got white people at the ball, Give me
three negroes. It just feel funny. Ain't gonna three negroes
on rocks. They're gonna be like three negros. They're not
gonna hollow. But negro is not on the same level
of the as the N word. Negro has never been

(01:16:46):
a slur. I don't know. I just just don't feel
right to me. If it was called the color you
know what I'm saying, that's different, or the coon. So
how did you feel if a black person at the
ball saying, I take four of them crackers and some
crackers to eat that them. That's if it was called
the Caucasian and the darkies, you know what I'm saying. No,
just Caucasian and the spooks, you know what I mean.

(01:17:09):
That's different. But negro I don't really bother me like that.
I don't know, I get what you're saying, though I
know you can hear some white people saying they be like,
what the hell are they saying? But they're they're in
a place where they are you know, it's drinks. Del
is too damn sensitive. Okay. My problem is, dude, you
got the money for the niggro And what state is this? Pennsylvania? Okay,
let me ask you a question. The restaurants here in

(01:17:30):
New York. I won't say their names because we love
these establishments, but they have meals called the Obama. Even
in Atlanta, they got meals called the Obama. And it's
like chicken and waffles, even though I chicken is also
a symbol of freedom. But is that offen, y'all? I
just don't I don't know. The negroes just sound just
I don't know. Just let me get the Obama just
sounds cool. And the Obama's dark meat and white meat
to represent his man. Good morning, good morning. Oh what's

(01:17:54):
your name? Brow twenty three? You better cut it out?
You're right, what's your dame name? Joe? Okay, Joe? What's
your thoughts? Joe? I'm doing all right. I listened to
you guys every morning. Thank you, sir, thank you. Oh yeah,
you got you guys literally break my day, heavy morning.
But yeah, I know about this topic. You guys are

(01:18:15):
talking about it, about this this brink. Yes, the negro
in the Caucasian drink. This offend you. You know, I'm
Puerto ricman in Italian and it's twenty twenty three. You
should all, you know, basically looking at it, it shouldn't
be alcial to you. You have no say in this
conversation called negro in Coucasian I don't want to hear

(01:18:39):
from a Porto Rican into Rican drink. I don't know
who's this hey shout, good morning, good morning. Hey. So
we're asking, you know, the Negro drink. You got a
problem with that? First of all, I want to know
I'm a black or white? It's probably white. Yeah, I
have a problem with that. But they have a Caucasian
drink too. They have a Caucasian right too. But you know,

(01:19:01):
shot him a little from that eight four or three too,
So you know how we feel about those type of situations. Absolutely,
that's not I mean, what about the restaurants where you
where you go in and they they paid the waitress
to be rude to you as the restaurant when they
call restaurant and uh yeah, so it's no different people.

(01:19:23):
You know what you're getting when you go to this
established me. So if they walk in they call you
a bee or whatever, you pay for that, then they
got restaurant. You going there, all the lights are cut out,
so it's what you if you walk at. That's what
you're talking about. That's one earlier called he said he

(01:19:45):
doesn't know if a man gives him oral it's not
getting Oh yeah, yeah, him don't look down. You know,
people pay for that rud rudeness. Yeah, but I don't
know about the Negro thing. Call us up right now,
what do you think? Eight hundred five eight five one
oh five one. It's a bar, a restaurant, I should say,
in Pennsylvania that is naming a couple of drinks. One
is called Caucasian and the other one is called the Negro. Now,

(01:20:06):
employees walked out. How do you feel about it? It's
the Breakfast Club, Good morning, call opinion to the Breakfast
Club Top five one five one morning. Everybody is DJ

(01:20:26):
Envy Charlomagne the guy. We are the Breakfast Club. We
have Miss Pat here, she's our guest host, and we're asking,
there's a restaurant out in Pennsylvania that is naming two
drinks Caucasian and Negro. Not employees are pissed off. They're
walking out, and we're asking, what are your thoughts? All out?
Who's this? Oh? Hey, that's hey TJ. Good morning. What
would you do in that situation? I'm to walk out.

(01:20:48):
I would have been walked out. I believe we have
and I'm by Raciel. My mother's Hispanic, my father is black.
But we have to stand up. That is just it's wrong.
It's completely wrong. They're disrespecting us, and it's it's not hollable,
like can you tell me what's wrong? Money in there?
And I just want to know, like, what's what's offensive
about Caucasian and Negro? I didn't know those were slurs

(01:21:08):
all of a sudden. I want to I don't want
to want to adjust me like that. You know, negro,
but it's on my versative again. I was born in
seventy two and I'm not Nobody's calling nobody a negro.
It's the name of a dream. And we was just saying,
it's restaurants out there that be rude to you. They
have different names. I mean, what what what what? I

(01:21:29):
went to a restaurant in Houston and they had the
Obama meal at the breakfast House, at the breakfast Club,
the restaurant down. Yeah, so white people walk in and say,
I don't want a meal called a breakfast Obama. I
just want chicken and waffle whatever, greets and aves. Yeah.
I just think were two cents of as people. I mean,
it's a bar and the word negro, I mean, we
don't use it in all every day of vernacular now,

(01:21:50):
but back in the sixties days to use it all
the time. You go listen to all the old MLK
Junior speeches. That's how he was referring to black people
like the negro and the Constitution, the negro in the
American dream. Negro was part of, you know, a huge
community who seek new freedom in every area of life.
These are MLK Junior's words, and there we became black people.
I don't know, Hello, who's that? I don't know? Hello? Yo,

(01:22:13):
God b good mowing in man. He personally, man, we
would have been fighting up the organ. I'm so confused. Man,
I'm not saying that y'all wrong. I just didn't I
don't know when negro became a slur. It's not the
words back in the principle that he can do that
and the black principle gonna be okay, would be okay

(01:22:35):
with that. Well, there's a Negro drinking, there's a Caucasian drink.
If it was just a Negro drinking, we were singled out,
I would probably be like, what is up with this?
But being that there was a Caucasian drink, this white, white,
white or black. If I'm a white person, I'm gonna
be you know, I'm offended as well. So it's just
a place on both sides. Why would you be offended
about an actual word or like Caucasian it means white

(01:22:55):
people and they're known for making these types of names
for their drinks. I wouldn't have been offended now. I
would have been offended if the black, if the if
the Negro only had gene in it, and the Caucasian
had better alcohol, then I would want to fight the Marny.
How you feeling, I'm great. How you got Saturday? W

(01:23:20):
you think about the Negro and Caucasian drinks? I think,
first off, we have to you know, I understand that
these people chose I just do that story like these
three months. First of all. Second of all, I feel
like people you said your first it's March. I know
what I'm saying. They didn't do this three months. They

(01:23:42):
had enough sense not to do that. But also, you know,
these days everything is about going viral and getting that attention. Um,
I feel like they just did that to, you know,
maybe get that certain notoriety, but didn't take into consideration,
you know, their employees or how anyone else would take it.
I feel like the world you know that we live
in these stay true. Well, thank you, mama. Hey, I

(01:24:06):
just I just googled Caucasian cocktail. Well, actually I gool
google Coctasian Caucasian drink. And when you google it, it's
a recipe, the Caucasian cocktail recipe. There's a bunch of them.
There's another drink called the Dude's Caucasian. What's the negro?
Did you google? Nego google the Negro. But the Caucasian
drink is you feel a rock, you feel a glassful
of ice pouring two shots of vodka and three shots

(01:24:28):
of coola, top off with milk. Oh my god, white.
Now go and do the negro. It's called the Caucasian cockail.
I don't know what you said, Negro drink. They have
one called in the Groni, but it's not negro. I
don't even know what the Negroni is. And it's cy

(01:24:50):
It's called in Negroni. It's called in the Groni. It's
borrowed from Italians, named after account named Camillo Negroni, who
asked for its creation in this out of gin sweet
Vermouth and kim Pari. I don't know what that is.
What's the moral of the story, the morel of the stories.
I don't know when Negro and Caucasian became slurred, but

(01:25:10):
I mean, if y'all want to be mad, y'all can
be mad. I don't. I don't like the Negro before
the Negros or Rocks now, I don't like that. I mean,
if a person, if I'm in there and I see
it on the men, and that's something that they do
every week, that's the that's what the restaurant do. I
want to get mad. It's the same way you go
to the rue restaurant. I personally probably wouldn't go there,
but I'm not gonna get mad because that's that's the
theme this month. People some people like themes and they

(01:25:33):
go get that right. Hey, all right, Well when we
come back, we got your room report. We'll tell you
who just had a baby and who's in a new relationship.
So don't move. It's to breakfast Club. Good morning, DJ
and Charlot ain't the guy brothers. We're happy ever seeing
at least I am. The verdict still out on Envy.
I'm black. It's the Breakfast Club. Only everybody in DJ Envy,

(01:26:00):
Charlomagne the guy. We are to breakfast club. We have
miss Pat here, our guest host. Let's get to the rumors.
Let's talk Spice or chatting the Rule report. I mean,
I guess we're on the breakfast clus. This is where
the tea spells right on the breakfast club. We gotta

(01:26:21):
say congratulations to Spice. She is pregnant. Now you know
Spice a dand tall order. She was on Love and
Hip Hop Atlanta. She announced yesterday. She posted a picture
She's glowing, she looks happy, and she posted God has
been so good to me. So congratulations to Spice. We
wish are a healthy, healthy birth. Congratulations pregnancy, all that

(01:26:41):
good stuff. Yes, now we gotta say new couple alert.
It seems like French Montana is dating Ruby Rose. They
were saying seeing going into mister child. So congratulations to
French Montana and Ruby Rose. If it's true. That's the
tea and he's feeling that tea right now. You saw
it for yourself. Yeah, they had TMT was taking pictures
and stuff like that. Okay, well, how do TIMZ know

(01:27:02):
they wanted her to just picking up take off for
different people. Now they wentn't there together. He put his
arm around as they walked into new relationship man, So congratulations,
don't put your arm around me, and they accuse us
of being in a relationship because we're going to eat
mister chow now. Also, Amanda Sial shout to Amanda Sial.
She was on the Jason Lee Show and she was

(01:27:24):
talking about Kamala Harris and how she felt about Kamala
Harris supporting our community. You know, when Kamala said this
ain't a racist country, she lost me and she ain't
got me back yet. Do you think that that was
her speaking to the hopes of not wanting to live
in a racist Do that we have a country that
was one thousand percent built on the foundation of racism

(01:27:46):
that now legislators are trying to pretend didn't happen and
are getting that through and doing it on an education
level and on a d EI level. In my opinion,
is particularly not just as vice president, as the first
black woman vice president and who got there and who
got this man elected largely in part because black women

(01:28:07):
like myself were like, do what we always do, let's
show up. You can't get in there in that position
and then make such an egregiously false statement. I mean,
the man didn't wrong. Understand politically why you know Vice
President Harris wouldn't say that because they don't want to
piss off those sent her right, white swing voters. But
the reality is when you in a time where people

(01:28:28):
are actually going into grocery stores like a man that said,
and you know, killing black people intentionally, you should be
able to say that, yes, this is raist, that's racist,
living a country that is full of racist Now we
have the actual when Kamala Harris said it right when
she responded, I don't think America is a racist country,
but we also do have to speak truth about the
history of racism in our country and it's and its

(01:28:48):
existence today. Like you said, she's not She's not wrong.
She's absolutely positively right. You know she's by racious. So
she was speaking on her white side the vice first.
Ain't she by racial? You know sometimes that's black and Indian? Right, Yes,
black Indian. It's not a white I believe it is. Well,

(01:29:12):
she ain't by racious, she's just black. You know where
all black people say they cherokeys. Mama was a cherokey.
She smoked weed. Yeah, but you don't always have to
be politically correct in regards to issues now when it's
a rais, especially when it's exactly all right, Well, you
got racially motivated shooting is happening in this country and

(01:29:34):
other racially motivated things. You can call that out, correct,
and you can call out the systemic racism in this country.
You can absolutely do that correct. All right, Well, that
is your room of reports this Pat. We appreciate you
hanging with us the last couple of days and tell
them about your tour because you're going on tour. Yeah,
something going on to us called your girl done made it.
Y'all go to miss Pat Comedy dot com. I'll take
his own sale now and um hey, make sure you

(01:29:56):
check out my podcast at the pat Down. And also
I have season in three streaming now on b ET
plus Baby. Y'all over that killing BT keep doing a
good job so I can buy the better week and
chastick for me and my friend Charlemagne. Look to bt
BT cooking right now. That's right. I was gonna ask
when when you when you do your comedy, your stand up,
you still get nervous. And though now I'm getting nervous,

(01:30:17):
not at all statural you like you don't just woke
up out of the bag, you know at the back
of the You know I always take a nap, so no,
I don't get nervous. I know what I'm doing. I
do it every night, and I'm the worst person that
you can hollw that that'll change the whole show. Some
hal com me because you have to go right back
at him. Oh my god, I'm the mustard kid at school.

(01:30:38):
I have all them flash back. I'm gonna drag you
till you dig your mama. And you know that I
always this is what I always say. You fat. I
am fat, but I could lose weight, but you can't
do no by the uglas face you got, you're not fat?
Saying that, I'm thinking, I'm only I'm fat with and
I'm black between the legs. Your big pack, big pat.
You're gonna say it coming a big pack, but not fat.

(01:30:59):
Do what I'm saying, like, you know, you're looking at me,
like to look at you to get you. You're saying
you're not bat man, I'm thick. I'm thick. What that mean?
That's what they usually say you because I'm not an ugly.
I mean I'm aka I got and you won't do
how I can't get them I've been mad thirty one years.
I'm happiness. It's all about happiness. What you don't see fatness,

(01:31:21):
and you see happeness, happiness. I take no blood pressure medication.
I'm happy. I'm taking my wig off like you take
your pants off. So I read your book after they
need to call you big rabbit. Ain't nobody call me big?
What do you keep saying, y'all? Ain't never book rabbit?
She said, they called me rabbit. I'm gonna takenna take
that keen, tuck chill and beat you down and students

(01:31:44):
with that keen because you need to get it one
of the black chair where you look like you look
very small in that chill shout man Jesus. All right,
well that is your rumor report. When we come back,
we got the People's choice makes get your requested. It's
the breakfast Club. Good Morning, Breakfast Club. Your mornings will
never be the same. Audible pick of the dig and

(01:32:05):
some people have real problems by Britt Bennett. Tessa Thompson
plays a conflicted woman who imagines living a totally different life.
Start listening when you sign up for a free thirty
day trial at the Home of Storytelling audible dot com
slash Breakfast Club. Everybody is cej n V Scholomagne the guy.
We are the Breakfast Club. We have Miss Pat here
our guest host. Miss Patter ain't here selling out shows.
Got everybody tuning in the BT plus that's right, you know,

(01:32:27):
trying to make a mood, trying to make a dear
for it and thank you guys for allowing me to
do that on your platform this week. Well, you know,
anytime you in town or you want to come on up,
pull on up. Well, but I don't know if that's
the case. Can you do that, Sholomae. Miss pat can
come up to promote anything anytime. Love Miss Pat. I

(01:32:48):
love having a rupt it and I love being here.
There you go, and then you do you do a party?
I do a party, call a fan appreciation party. Well
I call it a crack party, baby party. It's the
crack baby the same way beyond her fan the b high.
But she ain't never sold, No, honey, I've sold. Don't
that make a lot of sense? So I decided we

(01:33:11):
always always, we always take as artis, you know, but
we give all performing. So I started it last year
where I said, hey, let me do something for you guys.
So I got everybody together if you wanted to be
a part, and they came down to Atlanta. It was
over six hundred and some people. And then I even
had transportation to and from the hotel to make sure
that these fans from out of town were taking care

(01:33:32):
of it if they were if they were drinking. So
this year, the second one also October to fourteen, and
it's called the Miss Pat Day in Atlanta. So the
tickets on sale now at Ebright. You go to my
website at Miss Pat Company dot com and get your
tickets because they're going fast. And I think it's gonna
be about eight hundred of us. And it's a two
day event. Okay, it's a podcast and then it's a

(01:33:54):
podcast brunch and then it's also the big party. Just
to say I appreciate you, thank you for supporting me,
Miss Pat. Don't play My homie. K Jackson pulled up
because you know she has a wine collection called the
Random Wine. A black woman owned the wine company, and
Miss Passage, hey, I need some wine from my party.
Immediately she said she needed wine for her party. Yeah

(01:34:17):
drink right, Jimmy, Okay, yeah, I need forty I drunk.
Tell me your wine the other day too. While we're talking,
Oh yeah, yeah, forty man, But don't nobody's Instagram page
make me hungry like you forty forty And see I
can't eat none of for e forty page and that
trail Burger page, and I can't eat none of it
because I'm trying to get my cholestero all down. My
colester came down to it was at one thirty nine.

(01:34:38):
It's that one hundred right now. Nobody know what the
regular cholesterol is. But I didn't even know that would
eat forty wine. And I posted it and he tagged me.
I was like, women eat forty from backing the day this, Yes,
it was good too. Forty a time, tell you forty
got wine? He got chicken sandwich, burrito, forty got. I'm
going to the bar area this Saturday, actually, so I'm
gonna check in on on look. Yes, that's what I like.

(01:35:04):
I like a person that cooks but looks like they
actually eat the food they cook. That he forty being
that kitchen enjoying them meals. I go to his page,
My mouth sall water. Ain't forty caught me up when
I'm in the Bay Area. I was stopped by your
house for a little juice and a sandwich. There you
go when we come back. We got the positive note
the Breakfast Club, Good morning morning. Everybody is tj Envy. Charlomagne,

(01:35:25):
the guy we are the Breakfast Club's pat out co
host is here now. Charlomagne, you got a positive note,
I do, Man, but I want to tell everybody make
sure you're gonna get your tickets for the first ever
Black Effect Podcast Festival, happening Saturday, April twenty second and
atl at Pullman yard Man is hosted by myself and
my good sister Jesse. Hilarious eighty five South Show'll be
there doing that podcast live. Horrible Decisions. Will be there

(01:35:46):
doing that podcast live, Reasonably Shady. You'll be there doing
that podcast live, the Big Facts Podcast, Checking In podcast
with Michelle Williams and a whole lot more. Man. We're
gonna have music, We're gonna have food, all types of stuff.
So make sure you're gonna get your tickets. And thank
you to everybody that's been buying tickets. Man, the way
y'all buying tickets. We're definitely gonna have a sellout crowd.
So I truly, truly appreciate it. You can go to

(01:36:07):
event bright to get your tickets and from more information,
go to black effect dot com. Okay, now the positive note.
It's about perspective. Okay, Always remember that perspective. Man. What
you see depends not only what you look at, but
also on where you look. From breakfast club you know,
I'm finished or y'all dumb

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